Don’t be fooled by Chen Mu just sitting here as if he’s been casually chatting with Su Bingbing.
The patient’s boyfriend saw everything clearly.
For his girlfriend’s wound, Chen Mu handled it well.
And with one stitch, the massive bleeding was significantly alleviated.
Despite this Dr. Mu.
Has gained a lot of recognition online.
But so what.
Mu Yao is not Chen Mu after all.
He’s just an ordinary family mber of a patient, naturally hoping to secure the best possible dical treatnt for the person he cares about.
"Student, please calm down; the school will definitely take every student’s condition seriously."
"I assure you that as long as your girlfriend cooperates with the treatnt, there will definitely be no problem."
The boy, with red eyes, said, "Dr. Chen, since you’ve spoken, I trust you..."
Yet the way the boy looked at Mu Yao.
Still carried an underlying hostility he himself couldn’t quite understand.
Mu Yao: "..."
She finally understood why the seniors at school used to say.
The profession of a doctor, although it can heal people, is essentially a very offending job.
She just ca to inquire about the situation for another patient from Dr. Chen’s side.
Unexpectedly.
Inadvertently, she offended another family mber of a patient.
-
"Isn’t the boyfriend of this girl overreacting a bit?!"
"Exactly, Dr. Chen is the university doctor at Hai City University, as if he would let sothing go wrong with the students on his own turf?"
"You all are only considering from Dr. Chen’s perspective, no one is looking from the patient’s family’s point of view."
"This is just the school hospital; if your family mber was undergoing a life-and-death surgery in the hospital and soone tells you that another patient needs your lead surgeon more, requesting to temporarily switch to another lead surgeon for your family mber’s surgery, if you don’t have a slight emotional reaction at this mont, I can only say, you’re impressive!"
"I didn’t quite understand the emotional turmoil of the student earlier, but I suddenly get it now."
"Mainly because the explanation from that guy was too detailed, it’s hard not to understand."
"..."
-
After seeing the patient’s family mber calm down.
Ensuring there would be no extre actions from him.
Chen Mu’s gaze returned to Mu Yao beside him.
Looking at this young intern doctor, Chen Mu felt sowhat sympathetic.
These young intern doctors sent by Hai City University of Traditional dicine, though all are excellent.
In reality.
Being excellent is one thing.
How much knowledge can be applied in practice and the ability to withstand pressure at work are another matter.
Among so many intern doctors.
Only Mu Yao can be considered sowhat resilient under pressure.
With that in mind.
Chen Mu looked at Mu Yao and probed, "Was there any mistake in your work? During the consultation for that student Du?"
Mu Yao shook her head, "I believe there weren’t any mistakes, but after I advised him to go to the hospital for surgery, the patient beca quite agitated. We had no choice but to use manual repositioning first to try to solve the patient’s prolapse issue as much as possible."
"Following the usual process, since I handled the initial consultation, the subsequent repositioning work should also be conducted by , but..."
Mu Yao sighed, shaking her head, "That patient refused to let treat him just because I’m a woman."
At this point.
Mu Yao couldn’t help clenching her teeth, "In a doctor’s eyes, there shouldn’t be gender, and yet I, as a woman, didn’t mind, so why does he react so violently?!"
-
"It’s hilarious, putting myself in that guy’s shoes, and I’m socially dead already."
"Though I sympathize with Dr. Mu’s current plight, I don’t think that guy actually did anything wrong?"
"Indeed, he did nothing wrong; even as a man, wanting a bit of privacy is understandable, right?"
"But saying there’s no gender barrier in front of a doctor is also correct, let’s see what Dr. Chen says next."
"Our professor just ntioned, in clinical doctor-patient disputes, this is indeed a highly controversial topic, just like many male doctors in obstetrics, but often when it cos to performing C-sections, the patient’s family suddenly demands a change of surgeon because the lead surgeon is male."
"..."
-
Listening to Mu Yao’s side of things.
In front of the live broadcast cara, the usually eloquent Chen Mu fell silent for a mont.
He then spoke, "Actually, from your standpoint, you’re not wrong, and your sense of injustice is one you should have."
"But Mu Yao, have you ever heard that many tis, the patient’s mood is very important?"
"Especially for so, very sensitive patients."
Mu Yao, feeling a bit aggrieved, nodded, "Many predecessors told before, if in the future dical career, you encounter a very sensitive patient, we should appropriately endure so grievances."
"Otherwise, a single impulsive act from the patient might ruin our dical career, or even..."
At this point.
Mu Yao’s voice, from being indignant, turned a bit choked, "Even life..."
"Dr. Chen, I understand the seriousness of the situation."
Mu Yao’s tears fell heavily.
Mu Yao: "I have witnessed the painful lessons with my own eyes."
Mu Yao: "Just last year, when I was interning at a hospital under a very skilled head doctor, not only was that doctor exceptionally good at dicine, but he cared deeply for patients and we interns."
"But his own life, it was very thrifty."
"At that ti, I asked him, the salary of a chief physician in a public hospital, although not extravagant, should not be so tight; was it because his family needed money?"
Mu Yao wiped her tears, "But Dr. Chen, the answer I got from that head doctor was completely unexpected."
Mu Yao: "His parents passed away, he had no girlfriend, no wife or children; he was just a bachelor, and he lived so frugally because he wanted to save his salary to... to..."
Mu Yao, crying more intensely.
Chen Mu, sowhat moved, stood up and gently patted Mu Yao’s shoulder.
Everything was understood without words.
-
"Damn! I think I know who the head doctor Mu Yao interned under was!"
"That person was once a household na in Hai City, yet such a good person didn’t et a good end."
"My father once benefited from that doctor’s help; when he learned about the trouble that doctor was in, he was hospitalized for a heart attack."
"My mother was also treated by that doctor, and a year later, he called us to check if my mom’s condition had relapsed and suggested coming back for a check-up."
"Yes, that doctor even followed up with my grandfather by telephone, never forcing patients to review at his hospital; any reliable hospital was fine with him."
"But what’s the use; no good deed goes unpunished..."
"I’m getting dizzy from you guys going around in circles. Do you all know who the chief doctor Mu Yao ntioned is, or am I just out of touch with the tis?"
"..."
-
Mu Yao sniffled, with undisguised resentnt in her eyes.
"He wanted to save more money to support those patients who couldn’t afford to see a doctor."
"Yet such a doctor was ultimately stabbed to death by a family mber involved in a dical dispute!"
"Dr. Chen, I truly love this profession; otherwise, I wouldn’t have spent so much effort studying dicine."
"But I still don’t understand; we, we are just doing our job, why are there so many obstacles..."
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